About

The PLASTOX project will investigate the ingestion, food-web transfer, and ecotoxicological impact of microplastics, together with persistent organic pollutants (POPs), metals and plastic additive chemicals associated with them, on key European marine species and ecosystems. It will also study the temporal dynamics of microplastics colonisation by microbial communities in the field and the influence of microbial biofilms on ingestion rates and POP toxicity. The influence of microplastics physicochemical properties (size, shape, surface area and composition) on these processes will be evaluated. PLASTOX will combine field-based observations, laboratory tests, mesocosm and manipulative field experiments to study the ecological effects of microplastics.

Impact

PLASTOX will bridge the current gap between laboratory assessment using commercially available feedstock microplastics and the additive-loaded and degrading microplastics which dominate the marine environment. Macro-sized plastic debris collected from the marine environment will be used to generate microplastics derived from real marine litter, providing a common reference material for all project partners.

Adsorption and desorption of organic and inorganic pollutants to microplastics will be investigated using a range of common POP and metal contaminants. Studies will highlight how adsorption/desorption behavior varies between different contaminants, identifying which physicochemical properties are most influential. Studies will employ optimised laboratory and long-term field experiments at different stations in a wide range of European marine environments (Mediterranean, Adriatic, North, and Baltic Seas and the Atlantic) and in wastewater treatment plant effluents. As an innovative approach, compound-specific stable isotope analysis will be applied to understand the fate and transport of pollutants on microplastics. For microplastics extracted from radiometrically dated sediments, POP and metal determination will offer the first concentration estimates of the levels of pollutants gathered on microplastics over long time spans (10-30 years).

PLASTOX will investigate uptake through ingestion and other routes following controlled exposures. Microplastic accumulation in marine organism tissues, caused by transport across the gut and cell boundaries, will be studied and attempts made to quantify microplastics accumulation using state of the art analytical approaches. The acute and sublethal ecotoxicological effects of microplastics will be assessed on marine organisms from phyto- and zooplankton to (shell)fish and seabirds, representative of the full range of economically important marine living resources in the EU. Using data and competence generated in these studies, a more detailed understanding of the potential for microplastics transfer between trophic levels, and the subsequent impacts this may have, will be obtained. Finally, PLASTOX will culminate in a series of experiments bringing together the knowledge generated about microplastics and POPs/metals to study the combined fate and effects of these marine contaminants in food web studies. The knowledge generated will be summarized in a guidance document for development of future legislation and remedial efforts.

Funding partners

BELGIUM

Federal Public Planning Service Science Policy (BELSPO)

Contact:
David Cox

GERMANY

Research Centre Juelich (JÜLICH)

Contact:
Joachim Harms

Research Centre Juelich (JÜLICH)

Contact:
Ulrich Wolf

FRANCE

French National Research Agency (ANR)

Contact:
Maurice Heral

IRELAND

Marine Institute Ireland (MI)

Contact:
John Evans

ITALY

Ministry of Education, University and Research (MIUR)

Contact:
Aldo Covello

NETHERLANDS

Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO)

Contact:
Josef F. Stuefer

NORWAY

Research Council of Norway (RCN)

Contact:
Kristin E. Thorud

PORTUGAL

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia (FCT)

Contact:
Rita Silva

SWEDEN

Swedish Research Council for Environment, Agricultural Sciences and Spatial Planning (FORMAS)